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Anatomy of a Biosketch: Updated
Originally presented 1/10/12 by Karen Klein and Ryan Favreau Updated by Karen Klein, 5/3/16
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What is a Biosketch? A biosketch is a brief summary of your or someone else's professional/educational accomplishments, publications, and affiliations meant to highlight important aspects of your/their training, experience, and areas of interest. In simple terms: short sketch of a person’s life an abbreviated curriculum vitae
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Why Biosketches Matter More
Proposals are shorter. No room in text to “brag” about person’s qualifications and accomplishments. If it’s important, be sure it’s in the biosketch.
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We’ll discuss strategies for:
New section, “Personal Statement” Publications – making them count Research support Common issues in all of the above
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New Section: “Personal Statement”
Purpose: to summarize a person’s background and qualifications for a project. Do emphasize unique accomplishments (“I was one of three postdoctoral fellows who won the national XX Award”). For a PI, especially a new one: Do explain how the person is ready to conduct this project successfully – past funding, pilot studies, previous training, etc.
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New Section: “Personal Statement”
Do describe each person’s role in this proposal. Example for a training grant: “I will serve on Dr. X’s mentoring committee for this project, meet with him monthly, and provide specific guidance on Aim 3 of his project”. Example for other proposals: “I will carry out the XX assays described in Aim 2, assist in data interpretation, and be a coauthor on subsequent abstracts and manuscripts.”
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The “Personal Statement”
Reviewers’ equation: Degree to which biosketches are customized = amount of person’s involvement in application Don’t make it too long, or reviewers won’t read it. As an example, the NIH biosketch sample is 21 lines long.
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Most Frequent Issues in Biosketches
Personal Statement Missing altogether Vague and uninformative Person’s expertise not mentioned Person’s role not explicitly described
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Most Frequent Issues in Biosketches
Publications Nothing at all in last few years Items not updated (e.g. “in press, 2010”) Papers not yet accepted Inconsistent citation style (when in doubt, use PubMed style) Out of order (should be oldest to newest)
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Most Frequent Issues in Biosketches
Publications Not arranged as required: Up to 5 can be listed in the Personal Statement Up to 4 can be cited in each “Contribution to Science” in Section C (different from any cited in the Personal Statement) Since section C can have 5 contributions, that means 20 publications is the limit there (4 x 5) Overall, a total of 25 publications is the maximum
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Most Frequent Issues in Biosketches
Research Support Out of date (finished projects under “current”) Formatting (SF424 forms don’t use headers or footers; $ should not be listed) Missing details (especially if PI is elsewhere) “Pending” should not be included Completed Research Support: list only projects completed within last 3 years
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Overall Strategy for Biosketches
Balance the details. The biosketch should reflect the person’s overall qualifications. The “Personal Statement” should not crowd out publications, person’s funding history, or key accomplishments (e.g. study section service) Quality publications. Choose “high impact” journals, author listing (1st or last), and topics most pertinent to this proposal. Some should be recent, if possible.
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FAQ’s about Publications
List abstracts? Usually, no. Could do so for a trainee, to show work in progress, or a new research direction for a more senior investigator. List “revised” or “submitted” papers? NO. It’s “in press”, meaning final acceptance by the journal, or it’s out of the biosketch. Include “open access” publications? Avoid if possible; these are considered less rigorous. But include if there are few others to list.
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FAQ’s about Publications
Include book chapters? Usually, no. Are PMCIDs required? Yes, NIH now requires PMIDs or PMCIDs to be listed. Bottom line: PI will be reminded to include them when the proposal is reviewed by the Office of Sponsored Programs That alone will not be a reason why a proposal isn’t funded, but it sends a message of sloppiness to reviewers.
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FAQ’s about Research Support
List industry-sponsored work? Reviewers care most about NIH or comparable funding, so list those first. Can include industry-sponsored projects thereafter if they are especially pertinent. List only if salary derived? No; can list if there is effort but no salary, e.g. mentor role on a training program.
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Other Types of Biosketches?
What we have discussed covers 90% of Sponsor format requirements; however… There are others: Other NIH Fellowship, Sponsor/Co Sponsor National Science Foundation American Heart Association
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“Take-Home” Points The biosketch is a snapshot of the investigator’s qualifications. Shorter proposals mean that biosketches may contain details that appear nowhere else in the proposal. Publications and research support should always be checked for accuracy – they can change quickly. Follow the format. Make sure reviewers can find details they’re looking for.
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Questions? Contact your Grant Administrator in the Office of Sponsored Programs or Karen Klein in the Wake Forest CTSI
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